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Word: blizzarded (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...store sales, the largest decline in home values, and the longest decline in purchases since record keeping began. A record that probably drew less attention, though, was the one-day sales record for a computer game. In a month when, despite holiday shopping, retail sales actually fell 1.8 percent, Blizzard sold 2.8 million copies of their new World of Warcraft expansion, “Wrath of the Lich King,” at $40 a pop and in just...

Author: By Adam R. Gold | Title: No Recession in this Castle | 12/14/2008 | See Source »

...Saturday, the Class of 1978—who call themselves “the blizzard brigade”—enjoyed a soiree in a white room decorated with snowflake balloons to commemorate the Great Blizzard...

Author: By Bonnie J. Kavoussi and Yuying Luo, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERSS | Title: Alumni Reunite After Thirty, Forty, and Forty-Five Years | 10/13/2008 | See Source »

...trying to draw him in; he kept a distanced and almost curt manner, following up briskly and often. After a few follow-ups to his question on whether the U.S. had the right to invade Pakistan to pursue terrorist leaders, he asked bluntly, "I got lost in a blizzard of words there. Is that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How Did Palin Do? Two Views | 9/11/2008 | See Source »

...many words go into an event like the Democratic party convention? They're flakes in a blizzard - a few hit you, and the rest blow by in a blur. Amid that blizzard there was one perfect word, early in Barack Obama's virtuoso acceptance speech, to sum up the thrust of the entire storm...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Convention: Redefining Change | 8/29/2008 | See Source »

...characters or eschews the details of his fictional world (which, as the pictures of the first chapter attest, is not all that fictional), but that the characters’ thoughts are so relentlessly foregrounded that the rest of the work cowers behind them, reduced to obscurity by the intellectual blizzard. Gessen at times nails the details, as when he describes the standard Harvard lunch: “a huge bowl of green peas...a chicken parm sandwich, and...a cranberry-grapefruit mixture, which I’d patented.” But these glimpses of a fully realized literary world...

Author: By Sanders I. Bernstein, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: ‘Literary Men’ Lives On Ideas | 4/17/2008 | See Source »

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